Instantly find the Cached Version of any URL. See exactly what Googlebot saw during its last crawl, or retrieve lost content via the Wayback Machine.
View the snapshot taken by Google's crawler. Shows the page content as indexed by search.
View Cached PageTravel back in time. View historical versions of this page saved by the Internet Archive.
View HistoryWhen Google crawls the web, it takes a snapshot of each page to index it. This snapshot is stored as the "Google Cache." It allows you to view the content of a page exactly as Google saw it during its last visit.
Best for seeing the most recent version indexed. It reflects the current SEO status of a page.
Best for historical data. It keeps multiple snapshots over years, allowing you to see how a site looked in the past.
Essential for Webmasters.
Accidentally deleted a blog post? Server crashed before backup? Use the Cache Checker to retrieve the text and images from the cached version before they are overwritten by the next crawl.
Recover lost information.
This means Google has either not indexed the page yet, or the page has a noarchive meta tag preventing it from being cached. Recently, Google has also been reducing the availability of cache links for some queries.
You cannot force Google to cache a page instantly, but you can request indexing via Google Search Console. For the Wayback Machine, you can manually save a page on their website.